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      No Such Thing as a Simple Flare: Substructure and Quasi-periodic Pulsations Observed in a Statistical Sample of 20 s Cadence TESS Flares

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      The Astrophysical Journal
      American Astronomical Society

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          Abstract

          A 20 s cadence Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite monitoring campaign of 226 low-mass flare stars during Cycle 3 recorded 3792 stellar flares of ≥10 32 erg. We explore the time-resolved emission and substructure in 440 of the largest flares observed at high signal-to-noise, 97% of which released energies of ≥10 33 erg. We discover degeneracy present at 2 minute cadence between sharply peaked and weakly peaked flares is common, although 20 s cadence breaks these degeneracies. We better resolve the rise phases and find 46% of large flares exhibit substructure during the rise phase. We observe 49 candidate quasi-periodic pulsations (QPP) and confirm 17 at ≥3 σ. Most of our QPPs have periods less than 10 minutes, suggesting short-period optical QPPs are common. We find QPPs in both the rise and decay phases of flares, including a rise-phase QPP in a large flare from Proxima Cen. We confirm that the Davenport et al. template provides a good fit to most classical flares observed at high cadence, although 9% favor Gaussian peaks instead. We characterize the properties of complex flares, finding 17% of complex flares exhibit “peak-bump” morphologies composed of a large, highly impulsive peak followed by a second, more gradual Gaussian peak. We also estimate the UVC surface fluences of temperate planets at flare peak and find one-third of 10 34 erg flares reach the D90 dose of Deinococcus radiodurans in just 20 s in the absence of an atmosphere.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                The Astrophysical Journal
                ApJ
                American Astronomical Society
                0004-637X
                1538-4357
                February 25 2022
                February 01 2022
                February 25 2022
                February 01 2022
                : 926
                : 2
                : 204
                Article
                10.3847/1538-4357/ac426e
                4a8cc411-e69c-40fc-89d7-a0ba2a3a758b
                © 2022

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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